Title: Northern Ireland Vetting and Barring Scheme VBS
1Northern IrelandVetting and Barring Scheme (VBS)
- The Safeguarding Vulnerable Groups Order
Implementation Team - Pamela Mallon
- DHSSPS
2Context Bichard Inquiry
- Critical of inconsistencies in vetting and
barring decision-making at the time of the Soham
murders (barring decision-makers, police,
employers). - Barring systems reactive to harmful behaviour
rather than preventative. - Disclosure information certain on day of issue
only. - VBS specific response to recommendation 19 of the
Inquiry report.
3What is the Vetting and Barring Scheme?
- The Vetting and Barring Scheme (VBS) will be
established under the Safeguarding Vulnerable
Groups (NI) Order 2007 from October 2009. - Membership scheme for those with significant
access to children and/or vulnerable adults. - Registration and monitoring is aimed at
preventing unsuitable people from working or
volunteering with children and/or vulnerable
adults. - Will ensure an individual is removed from
working/volunteering with vulnerable groups when
harm/risk of harm is demonstrated or proven.
4What is the Vetting and Barring Scheme?
- New Independent Safeguarding Authority (ISA)
central to the VBS ISA will provide independent
decision making. - Replaces POCVA and DE regulations and extends
existing arrangements. - Equivalent arrangements across the UK.
5Who comes within scope of the VBS?
- VBS is defined in terms of regulated or
controlled activity - Work in regulated or controlled activity
- Paid employees
- Volunteers
- New entrants to the workforce
- Existing workforce
- Work placement students (age 16)
- Those coming to work in Northern Ireland from
elsewhere
6What is Regulated Activity
- Involves contact with children or vulnerable
adults and is - of a specified nature (e.g. teaching, training,
care, supervision, advice, treatment or
transport) . frequently or intensively - in a specified place (e.g. schools, care homes,
childcare premises, young offenders
institutions, etc.) frequently or intensively
or - a defined position of responsibility (e.g. school
governor, director of social services, trustees
of certain charities) or - fostering, childminding and day care provision
or - manager/supervisor of worker in regulated
activity.
7What regulated activity means
- To undertake regulated activity an individual
must be ISA-registered. - An employer/volunteer manager must not engage in
regulated activity a person who is not
ISA-registered. - The employer/organisation must check that a
prospective employee/volunteer who will be in
regulated activity is ISA-registered. - A barred person must not undertake regulated
activity.
8Definition of Controlled Activity
- Ancillary support workers in particular settings
- FE, the Health Settings (primary and secondary)
and adult social care settings (e.g cleaner,
caretaker, receptionist) - Those working for specified organisations with
frequent access to health, educational or
personal social services records about children
or vulnerable adults or those with access to
records of family court proceedings. - Specified organisations include ELB, HSS Body,
CCEA
9What controlled activity means
- It will be mandatory to check the ISA status of
individuals in controlled activity (to establish
whether a person is barred). - A barred person can be employed in controlled
activity, provided safeguards have been put in
place (for example, repeat enhanced disclosures,
risk assessments). - Controlled activity does not apply to District
Council settings
10What workers need to know
- If you want to work with children or vulnerable
adults in regulated activity you must be
registered with the ISA. - There will be a cost for registration.
- You will need to register before you start
working. - You apply once and pay once.
11Process of ISA registration
- AccessNI will process ISA applications.
- AccessNI will gather and provide to ISA relevant
information disclosed as part of the application
process. - The cost will be 58.
- In many cases volunteers will pay nothing for ISA
registration.
12What employers need to know
- You must not employ anyone to carry out regulated
activity if they are not ISA registered if you
do you are breaking the law and can be fined. - If you knowingly employ a barred person to work
in regulated activity, you will commit an offence
and can be imprisoned or fined. - You will always need to check a persons ISA
status before employing them in regulated or
controlled activity. - You will be able to check if an individual is ISA
registered by conducting a free on-line check
with his/her consent. - You cannot have them in post, even supervised,
before you know the outcome of the check. - no distinction between staff members and
volunteers
13On-line Checking
Scheme Member
Not barred
Not applied
Not a Scheme Member
Voluntarily withdrawn
BARRED
14Continuous monitoring
- All ISA registered individuals are subject to
continuous monitoring. - Continuous monitoring will ensure that any
relevant information is flagged and passed to
ISA. - On receipt of new information the ISA will review
the individuals ISA status. - ISA registered individual will be notified of a
change in ISA status.
15Employer Registration of Interest
- Employers will register an interest in the status
of their employee/volunteer. - Employers who have registered an interest will be
notified if the status of their
employee/volunteer changes. - The ISA will inform professional and regulatory
bodies when it bars someone, so that their
professional registration can also be reviewed.
16Duties to refer to the ISA
- Employers, personnel suppliers, professional and
regulatory bodies, and HSC Trust child/adult
protection teams must refer relevant information
to the ISA. - In other circumstances, employers may refer
information regarding an individuals conduct to
the ISA. - Parents/private employers should go to a
statutory agency (e.g. social services or the
police).
17When MUST an employer refer
- An organisation must refer in the following
circumstances - If an employee/volunteer is dismissed or moved
from regulated activity because they have engaged
in relevant conduct towards a child or vulnerable
adult. - If an employee/volunteer has been removed from
regulated activity for engaging in relevant
conduct. - If an employee/volunteer under investigation for
engaging in relevant conduct resigns before a
disciplinary investigation is complete.
18When MAY an employer refer?
- If employers/volunteer managers have other
concerns about an individuals behaviour that
doesnt reach the mandatory benchmark he/she MAY
be reported to the ISA. - If employers/volunteer managers have serious
concerns about an individual whom they do not
employ/manage, they MAY report him/her to the
ISA. - The ISA will consider all relevant information.
19Process for referring
- Referrals to the ISA from 13 March 2009.
- From that point, barring decisions will be made
by the ISA. - Guidance setting out the ISA referral process and
new referral forms to be used are available on
the ISA website. - DHSSPS guidance Choosing to Protect has been
updated to reflect new referral arrangements.
20Barring routes
- Auto bar offences without representation
- Auto bar offences with representation
- Bar based on referrals to the ISA
21Portability
- In most cases, ISA registration will be portable
- May be the need to obtain enhanced disclosure
certificates in addition to on-line checking of
registration status - employer discretion
- policy
- legislative requirement
22Phasing
- New entrants to the workforce and those moving
job/post will be first to join the VBS. - Members of existing workforce will be phased into
the VBS over a five year period. - Phasing Strategy being developed for Northern
Ireland. - AccessNI route into the VBS in Northern Ireland.
23Commencement Schedule NI6 Stages of
Implementation
- Stage 1
- Establishment of the ISA January 2008
- Stage 2
- Migration from existing to new barred lists
February 2009 - Stage 3
- Start of ISA decision-making 13 March 2009
24Commencement Schedule NI6 Stages of
Implementation
- Stage 4
- Start of provisions relating to barring 12
October 2009 - Stage 5
- Start of provisions relating to registration and
monitoring July 2010 - Stage 6
- Interface with the Scottish Scheme late 2010
25Implications for District Councils
- District Councils will employ those in regulated
activity - A District Council will therefore be a Regulated
Activity Provider - The District Council will be required to check
ISA registration of all those they employ in a
regulated activity e.g. coaches, instructors - The District Council will register an interest in
each registered employee - Those in regulated activity within the existing
workforce will be phased in over a five year
period
26Next Steps - Government
- Secondary Legislation
- Information Leaflets
- Guidance
- Communications Activity
- Awareness-raising sessions
- Website www.dhsspsni.gov.uk/svg
- ISA Telephone Helpline - 03001231111
- Direct Marketing Campaigns
- Employers
- Intermediary bodies
27Next Steps - Organisations
- Identify posts in organisation within scope of
VBS Scoping Exercise - Internal communication to relevant
staff/volunteers - Access guidance and publications as available
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